Low latency carbon budget analysis reveals a large decline of the land carbon sink in 2023

被引:0
|
作者
Piyu Ke [1 ,2 ]
Philippe Ciais [3 ]
Stephen Sitch [2 ]
Wei Li [1 ]
Ana Bastos [4 ,5 ]
Zhu Liu [1 ]
Yidi Xu [3 ]
Xiaofan Gui [6 ]
Jiang Bian [6 ]
Daniel SGoll [3 ]
Yi Xi [3 ]
Wanjing Li [1 ]
Michael OSullivan [2 ]
Jefferson Goncalves De Souza [2 ]
Pierre Friedlingstein [2 ,7 ]
Frdric Chevallier [3 ]
机构
[1] Department of Earth System Science,Tsinghua University
[2] Faculty of Environment, Science and Economy,University of Exeter
[3] Laboratoire des Sciences du Climat et de l'Environnement,University Paris Saclay CEA CNRS
[4] Institute for Earth System Science and Remote Sensing,Leipzig University
[5] Department of Biogeochemical Integration, Max Planck Institute for Biogeochemistry
[6] Machine learning group
[7] Laboratoire de Météorologie Dynamique, IPSL,CNRS, ENS,Université PSL,Sorbonne Université,école
关键词
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
X171.1 [生态系统与生态环境];
学科分类号
摘要
In 2023, the CO2 growth rate was 3.37 ± 0.11 ppm at Mauna Loa, which was 86% above that of the previous year and hit a record high since observations began in 1958, while global fossil fuel CO2 emissions only increased by 0.6% ± 0.5%. This implies an unprecedented weakening of land and ocean sinks, and raises the question of where and why this reduction happened. Here, we show a global net land CO2 sink of0.44 ± 0.21 GtC yr-1, which is the weakest since 2003. We used dynamic global vegetation models, satellite fire emissions, an atmospheric inversion based on OCO-2 measurements and emulators of ocean biogeochemical and data-driven models to deliver a fast-track carbon budget in 2023. Those models ensured consistency with previous carbon budgets. Regional flux anomalies from 2015 to 2022 are consistent between top-down and bottom-up approaches, with the largest abnormal carbon loss in the Amazon during the drought in the second half of 2023(0.31 ± 0.19 GtC yr-1), extreme fire emissions of 0.58 ± 0.10 GtC yr-1in Canada and a loss in Southeast Asia(0.13 ± 0.12 GtC yr-1). Since 2015, land CO2uptake north of 20°N had declined by half to 1.13 ± 0.24 GtC yr-1in 2023. Meanwhile, the tropics recovered from the 2015–2016 El Ni?o carbon loss, gained carbon during the La Ni?a years(2020–2023),then switched to a carbon loss during the 2023 El Ni?o(0.56 ± 0.23 GtC yr-1). The ocean sink was stronger than normal in the equatorial eastern Pacific due to reduced upwelling from La Ni?a's retreat in early 2023 and the development of El Ni?o later. Land regions exposed to extreme heat in 2023 contributed a gross carbon loss of 1.73 GtC yr-1, indicating that record warming in 2023 had a strong negative impact on the capacity of terrestrial ecosystems to mitigate climate change.
引用
收藏
页码:192 / 202
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] A Review on Carbon Source and Sink in Arable Land Ecosystems
    Liu, Xiaochen
    Wang, Shuai
    Zhuang, Qianlai
    Jin, Xinxin
    Bian, Zhenxing
    Zhou, Mingyi
    Meng, Zhuo
    Han, Chunlan
    Guo, Xiaoyu
    Jin, Wenjuan
    Zhang, Yufei
    LAND, 2022, 11 (04)
  • [42] Evaluation of the potential for carbon sink and association with land occupation
    Yogi, Fernando
    Stanganini, Fabio Noel
    Tonello, Kelly Cristina
    Isa, Selma Setsumi
    JOURNAL OF WATER AND CLIMATE CHANGE, 2023, 14 (02) : 401 - 420
  • [43] Pasture land could be nature's carbon sink
    Vijayakumar, A. K.
    NEW SCIENTIST, 2018, 239 (3189) : 53 - 53
  • [44] Large Chinese land carbon sink estimated from atmospheric carbon dioxide data (vol 586, pg 720, 2020)
    Wang, Jing
    Feng, Liang
    Palmer, Paul I.
    Liu, Yi
    Fang, Shuangxi
    Bosch, Hartmut
    O'Dell, Christopher W.
    Tang, Xiaoping
    Yang, Dongxu
    Liu, Lixin
    Xia, ChaoZong
    NATURE, 2020, 588 (7837) : E19 - E19
  • [45] Climate change and the transition to a low carbon economy - Carbon targets and the carbon budget
    Nyambuu, Unurjargal
    Semmler, Willi
    ECONOMIC MODELLING, 2020, 84 : 367 - 376
  • [46] Carbon sink forest in Expressway under the guidance of low carbon transportation
    Zheng, Chaocheng
    Zhang, Yi
    Cheng, Dongxiang
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 2016 4TH INTERNATIONAL EDUCATION, ECONOMICS, SOCIAL SCIENCE, ARTS, SPORTS AND MANAGEMENT ENGINEERING CONFERENCE (IEESASM 2016), 2016, 22 : 606 - 609
  • [47] Harmonizing direct and indirect anthropogenic land carbon fluxes indicates a substantial missing sink in the global carbon budget since the early 20th century
    Walker, Anthony P.
    Obermeier, Wolfgang A.
    Pongratz, Julia
    Friedlingstein, Pierre
    Koven, Charles D.
    Schwingshackl, Clemens
    Sitch, Stephen
    O'Sullivan, Michael
    PLANTS PEOPLE PLANET, 2024,
  • [48] Analysis of carbon emission efficiency and optimization of low carbon for agricultural land intensive use
    You, Heyuan
    Wu, Cifang
    Nongye Gongcheng Xuebao/Transactions of the Chinese Society of Agricultural Engineering, 2014, 30 (02): : 224 - 234
  • [49] Land use change and nitrogen feedbacks constrain the trajectory of the land carbon sink
    Gerber, Stefan
    Hedin, Lars O.
    Keel, Sonja G.
    Pacala, Stephen W.
    Shevliakova, Elena
    GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS, 2013, 40 (19) : 5218 - 5222
  • [50] Impact of changes in diffuse radiation on the global land carbon sink
    Mercado, Lina M.
    Bellouin, Nicolas
    Sitch, Stephen
    Boucher, Olivier
    Huntingford, Chris
    Wild, Martin
    Cox, Peter M.
    NATURE, 2009, 458 (7241) : 1014 - U87